Just think of a block as a block of code that you can store and execute whenever you like. So your classes could look like:
ClassA.m
- (void)someMethod
{
ClassB *obj = [ClassB new];
[obj doSomethingAndThen:^(BOOL success) {
if (success) {
NSLog(@"WIN!");
}
else {
NSLog(@"Oh no");
}
}
}
ClassB.h
typedef void (^SuccessBlock)(BOOL success);
@interface ClassB : NSObject
@property (nonatomic, copy) SuccessBlock successBlock;
- (void)doSomethingAndThen:(SuccessBlock)block;
@end
ClassB.m
@interface ClassB
- (void)doSomethingAndThen:(SuccessBlock)block
{
self.successBlock = block;
// Assume LRThing is something like NSURLConnection
LRThing *thing = [LRThing new];
thing.delegate = self;
[thing start];
}
- (void)longRunnigThingDidEnd
{
if (_successBlock) {
_successBlock(YES);
self.successBlock = nil;
}
}
- (void)longRunningThingDidFail
{
if (_successBlock) {
_successBlock(NO);
self.successBlock = nil;
}
}
@end
That's a very simple example, and obviously you want to do more checks, e.g. checking whether you already have a block before assigning one to self.successBlock. Hope this helps!